Ambrose laments fall of Windies

West Indies cricket is in a shambles and its fast bowlers have forgotten how to intimidate batsmen, feels legendary pacer Curtly Ambrose who does not foresee a return to past glory for the team anytime soon.

“The present standard is very, very bad and the only way interest can be revived is if we start winning some matches,” said Ambrose, who took 405 wickets from his 98 Tests.

Ambrose is disappointed that West Indian fast bowlers have forgotten the art of intimidating batsmen.

“I think it's very important for a fast bowler to be intimidating. He must intimidate batsmen. I used to do it. I liked to soften them up,” he recalled.

The giant fast bowler feels slow pitches have contributed a lot to the decline of pacers in the Caribbean.

“Two things have contributed to the downfall of West Indies cricket. Firstly, the pitches in the Caribbean have really slowed down and secondly, there is no deal of great experience which is being passed around in the dressing room,” he lamented. He recollected his early playing days when interaction with Malcolm Marshall helped him fine tune his skills.

“When I joined the team, I learnt a lot by just interacting with Malcolm Marshall, and later with Courtney Walsh. Now, these guys (the present team) have nobody to talk to; they are just sharing between them whatever little they have learnt from international cricket.”

He didn't play much against India but his affection knows no bounds for Sachin Tendulkar.

“When I first watched him, it was in England in 1990 when he appeared as a schoolboy. Yet watching him hit his first century at the age of 17, you knew here was a special talent,” he said. Two years later, they were squaring up in a World Cup game in Basin Reserve Park in Wellington and Ambrose dismissed Tendulkar with a delivery that kicked off from short of good length to take his outside edge.

“He was a young guy and I was senior. So I needed to keep that equation,” Ambrose laughed.

Toughest batsman

For the Antiguan, the toughest batsman he ever bowled to was David Boon of Australia, not to mention former Aussie skipper Steve Waugh with whom he nearly exchanged fisticuffs.

However, Ambrose still has a great deal of respect for Waugh.

It was the Trinidad Test of 1995 series against Australia. Waugh was repeatedly hit on the body by Ambrose's bouncers.

He let out his steam with a few chosen ones and enraged Ambrose to the extent he stood next to him, glaring and a physical contest wasn't far away.

Ambrose though had the last laugh when he won the Test for West Indies and helped it square the series 1-1.

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